The JFK Assassination Mole They Thought Was Inside

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The declassified file 206-10001-10015 reveals a little-known internal CIA investigation from early 1964.

The target: a suspected mole inside the Agency who may have leaked internal surveillance methods to Soviet intelligence.

The trigger? A recording from a wiretap on a Cuban embassy line in New York that revealed knowledge the Agency assumed was classified.

The memo labeled the breach “Red-Level Internal Exposure.”


🎧 The Tape That Shouldn’t Have Existed

The CIA memo, dated February 12, 1964, describes a captured telephone conversation between two men speaking in Spanish.

One, presumed to be a Cuban national, casually refers to a specific U.S. audio surveillance configuration used to intercept conversations from a Cuban consulate office.

The line?

“Tell him to avoid the setup like in the 4th floor - they use the central drop under the air duct.”

According to the memo, that phrase exactly matched a method detailed in an internal CIA communications memo - distributed only to 12 people.


🔍 Internal Panic - And The Leak List

The moment the match was confirmed, a special review was ordered under Office of Security Case 4435-C, nicknamed “DEAD ECHO.”

The memo includes:

  • A list of personnel who had access to the “central drop air duct” technique
  • Notation that “6 of 12 persons reviewed have field experience with HT/LINGUAL and Cuban desk crossover”
  • An urgent directive to monitor “off-hours communication logs”

👤 Suspected Profile: Language + Lateral Access

The mole theory took hold because the leak wasn’t just technical - it was linguistically specific. The memo notes that the speaker used phrasing identical to a training brief given to bilingual CIA surveillance officers.

“Phraseology suggests speaker either received CIA briefing or was briefed by someone with internal clearance.”

One side note even reads:

“No logical source for vocabulary outside direct agency exposure.”


🛑 But Then It All Stopped

The final page of the memo contains an abrupt closure note:

“Review suspended. Further inquiry deemed non-productive unless subsequent breach occurs.”

There’s no explanation.

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No interviews.

No follow-up names.

Just an internal kill switch on the investigation - despite confirmation that someone, somewhere, leaked a surveillance method so specific it could only come from inside.


🧩 Was It Paranoia - Or Did The Mole Get Away?

What’s chilling is how quickly the mole hunt was abandoned.

📌 A known leak
📌 Matching language
📌 A cable marked RED LEVEL
📌 Twelve suspects
📌 Zero outcomes

The memo simply ends.

The 2025 release is the first public evidence that this mole hunt ever existed.


🧨 They Knew Someone Talked But They Chose Silence

In a world still reeling from Kennedy’s assassination, the idea of a breach within CIA walls was too explosive to pursue.

So instead - they shut it down.

And the speaker on the line?

Still unknown.

Disclaimer: All content on this website is based on declassified documents hosted on the National Archives. Where a specific source is not cited, the information has been compiled from a range of related materials, primarily the JFK Assassination Records. Every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, but if you notice any errors or discrepancies, please let us know by leaving a comment.

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